As with most Super7
motherboards, the P5F110 features a fully jumper driven CPU setup. The documented
settings include clock multipliers ranging from 1.5 to 5.5x and voltages ranging from 2.1v
to 3.5v in 0.2v increments, meaning that the 2.4v required by the K6-3 is supported.
The clock generator aboard the P5F110 supports a unique variety of FSB settings
most unofficially, the list is composed of the
60/66/70/75/80/83/95/100/105/110/115/120/124MHz settings, with the 95/105MHz settings
coming in handy for use with the K6-2 333 and the K6-2 475 processors. The
overclocking potential of the P5F110 is above average with the amount of voltage tweaking
and FSB tweaking that is possible.

As far as hardware
monitoring features go, the P5F110 falls pretty short. With only one on-board
thermistor, placed in the middle of the Socket-7 CPU interface, monitoring the temperature
of your system as a whole isn't too possible. The hardware monitoring controller
aboard the P5F110 does allow for both on-board fans to be monitored, as well as the
standard set of voltages which can come in handy if you're diagnosing potential problems
regarding voltage supplied to your CPU for example. Provided with the P5F110 is a
hardware monitoring interface for Win9x. Along with that disk, the on-chip Trident
Blade 3D is supported via two drivers disks, one for Windows 9x, and the other for Windows
NT/2000. The inclusion of a working Windows 2000 driver is an interesting addition
to an otherwise seemingly unsupported VGA adapter. Freetech also includes a copy of
VIA's Bus Mastering drivers, their AGP GART drivers, and the Award Flash Utility.
Not a bad handful there.

The stability of the
P5F110 wasn't an issue at all, actually the board performed quite well and exceeded all
expectations as the setup and configuration of the board was a breeze as was the burn-in
testing process. Kudos to Freetech on a job well done in designing the motherboard,
it's too bad that not more "high-end" Super7 motherboards aren't designed with
the same reliability as this integrated MVP4 solution was designed with. Although
the board is a far cry from being a rock solid server solution, it is definitely a decent
offering, much more than you'd expect from a company like Freetech.